Europe and Korea Look to Define 5G

The European Commission and South Korea today announced plans to together define the future 5G wireless standard, as well as develop the technologies to support it. The two bodies signed a Joint Declaration on Strategic Cooperation in Information Communications Technology (ICT) and 5G to increase the discussions and research around the topic. A wide number of companies will participate, including Alcatel-Lucent, Deutsche Telekom, Ericsson, Nokia, Orange, Telecom Italia, Telenor, and Telefonica from Europe, as well as Samsung, LG, SK Telecom, and others in Korea. One of the key ideas behind 5G is not to just increase speeds, but to significantly boost capacity. Capacity improvements will help the 5G networks of the future handle all the potential devices connecting to them, such as phones, tablets, wearables, vehicles, and the broader Internet of Things. The collaboration has three main goals: First, to develop a broad definition of the key functionalities of 5G and create a time table for its creation by the end of 2015; Second, to kick off joint research in the pursuit of 5G by 2016 in coordination with 3GPP and ITU: and Third, to agree on global radio frequency bands for 5G in order to promote interoperability and roaming between carriers and countries. "5G will become the new lifeblood of the digital economy and digital society once it is established. Both Europe and Korea recognize this," said Neelie Kroes, Vice-President of the European Commission for the Digital Agenda. "This is the first time ever that public authorities have joined together in this way, with the support of private industry, to push forward the process of standardization. Today's declaration signals the our commitment to being global digital leaders." LTE, which is what most 4G networks use, has some room for growth in terms of speeds, but capacity is limited and the potential for global roaming is limited due to the wide number of spectrum bands used by carriers around the world. It is these and other issues that the EU and S. Korea hope to resolve in their pursuit of 5G.

We have yet to have any LTE-Advanced national networks. Are we going to see commercials in the next couple of years touting LTE-Advanced as "5G"? And really... what's the endgame? Is "6G" going to be messaging from my brainwaves to someone's LG device? There are real limits to what speeds we can achieve not to mention the limit of what we can actually DO with that speed. If we see theoretical leaps with 5G on the same scale as 4G was supposed to bring us, it will be 30+ years before we actually see these technologies in use. By that time Ray Kurzwell and Skynet will be in charge and we'll be human batteries anyway.

I would like to see what the us gonna said, ohh wait, we already know that, they gonna said "we are better than the rest of the world" "we gonna develop our own $h17" not compatible with the rest of the world like we always do, and God bless america!